The Guardian's coverage of Trump's "antifa" prosecutions highlights a covert escalation of systemic repression rather than the emergence of a new threat. While it depicts the federal indictment against Cop City protesters as a shocking maneuver, this is merely the latest play in a long history of state-sponsored violence rooted in colonialism, slavery, and counterinsurgency tactics. The narrative frames Trump as the villain while obscuring the entrenched architecture of oppression that transcends his administration. The real battle lies in organizing effective resistance, connecting various social justice movements, and building robust defense mechanisms amidst a climate poised for increasing militarization and legislative warfare against dissent.
The Rolling Conquest: When Empire Calls Itself Democracy
The alarm over Trump’s so-called “rolling coup” misses the mark, framing it as a betrayal of democracy rather than recognizing it as a byproduct of a long-standing imperial legacy. The machinery wielded now—surveillance, detention, repression—has deep roots in American history, not just Trump’s era. The danger extends beyond authoritarianism; it’s about an empire shifting to open coercion as it faces crisis. The solution isn’t to restore a flawed system but to cultivate organized, anti-imperialist solidarity. It's time for the oppressed to reclaim their agency, defend against state violence, and dismantle the architecture of oppression that fuels this mechanized repression.
Empire vs. Sekou Odinga: Counterinsurgency, Community Power, and the War for Black Liberation (1944–2024)
Jamaica, Queens forged a revolutionary in the shadow of Malcolm X. The Black Panther Party built dual power — and the state answered with disruption. Underground struggle met federal conspiracy and thirty-three years of captivity. Elderhood returned him to a new generation still facing the same empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black... Continue Reading →
Fred Hampton and the Revolutionary Meaning of Solidarity
Chicago is shown here not as a northern refuge of progress, but as what it actually was and remains: an internal colony where segregation, poverty, and police occupation shaped Fred Hampton into a revolutionary Marxist with no illusions about the system he was up against. From those conditions came a politics willing to go where... Continue Reading →
Lil’ Bobby Hutton and the Generation That Refused to Beg
A teenage Panther whose life exposed the colonial reality inside the United States. His political awakening marked the rise of organized Black revolutionary youth. His killing revealed how the state responds when the oppressed build power.His memory remains a lesson in struggle, organization, and historical continuity. Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters... Continue Reading →
An Act of State: Martin Luther King Jr., Political Assassination, and the Crime of Empire
William F. Pepper’s An Act of State dismantles the myth of a tragic killing and exposes the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. as a deliberate act of governance—carried out to halt a revolutionary convergence of anti-imperialism, class struggle, and mass organization inside the United States. This MLK Day intervention refuses memorialization and restores King... Continue Reading →
Assata Shakur and Charlie Kirk: Two Martyrs, Two Americas
One died free in exile, a symbol of liberation; the other died at home, a symbol of reaction. Their lives and deaths mirror the split soul of America, caught between empire and freedom.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 26, 2025Death as a Mirror of EmpireIn September 2025, two deaths shook the American political... Continue Reading →
Assata Shakur: Autobiography of Liberation, Indictment of Empire
A 21-Gun Salute to a Revolutionary Who Died Free and Unbroken By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Intellects | September 26, 2025 Assata in the Crosshairs They called her a fugitive, a terrorist, a threat to the republic. The newspapers splashed her face across their pages like a wanted poster, as if she were a bandit... Continue Reading →
From the Ashes of Attica: Sharpening the Spear Against the Silence of Western Marxism
A Revolutionary Review of Orisanmi Burton’s Tip of the Spear — and an Indictment of the Euro-American Left’s Cowardice in the Face of Black InsurgencyBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 5, 2025They Called It a Riot. He Called It War. In the hands of Western Marxism, the Attica uprising is little more than... Continue Reading →